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How I Found Freedom From Addiction

Addiction is often misunderstood. Many think it is about a substance, habit, or behavior, but in truth, addiction is the soul and body searching for comfort, safety, and relief. The heart longs to feel secure, loved, and at peace, and when life becomes overwhelming, the body can latch onto temporary comforts to soothe fear, pain, loneliness, or grief. Trauma, unresolved pain, and stressful experiences leave lasting marks on both the mind and body, often creating patterns of seeking relief that can appear as addiction. The body literally remembers and reacts to past hurts, storing tension, fear, and anxiety, and the addictive habit becomes a way the mind and body attempt to feel safe, even if only for a moment. Recognizing that the habit is not the real need is the first step toward healing. What a person truly craves is not the addictive thing itself, but a sense of inner safety, emotional relief, and spiritual wholeness, and only God can fully satisfy that longing.

Turning to God in prayer, leaning on support, and immersing the heart in His Word begins to meet the deep needs the habit once tried to cover. Recovery is a journey, not a single moment, and it involves patience, grace, and daily reliance on God’s love. Healing comes gradually as the body and mind learn a new sense of security, not in temporary comforts, but in God’s presence, His guidance, and His promises. Freedom is possible, and the heart can flourish when we replace fear with faith, temporary relief with lasting peace, and isolation with connection to God and supportive community.

For those seeking deeper understanding, several books offer guidance and hope. *Clean: Overcoming Addiction and Ending America’s Greatest Tragedy* by David Sheff explains the science and personal struggle of addiction while emphasizing hope and recovery strategies. *The Recovery Book* by Al J. Mooney and colleagues is practical, offering steps for overcoming addiction and maintaining lasting change while integrating mind, body, and spirit. *Addiction and Grace* by Gerald G. May explores addiction from a spiritual perspective, helping readers understand how longing, emptiness, and seeking can lead to habits and how God’s grace restores the soul.

I personally, highly recommend *The Body Keeps the Score* by Bessel van der Kolk. After prayer, I felt the Lord lead me to this type source, and I must tell you that this method healed and set me completely free from many years of an addiction to sweets. It will work for any type of addiction. It explains how trauma and stress are physically stored in the body, showing how unresolved pain often drives addictive behaviors, and offers great insight into healing both body and mind. Each of these books provides understanding, practical tools, and hope for transformation and freedom.

Remember, addiction is not a moral failing. It is a sign of deep human need, often rooted in experiences that shaped the body and mind before a person even realized it. Recognizing that need allows God’s love to enter, bringing true healing, peace, and restoration. Each step toward Him—through prayer, reflection, reading, and connection—is a step toward freedom.

His Word reminds us, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” — Matthew 11:28.

When the heart turns to God, the soul finds comfort, the body finds safety, and the life-long yearning for peace begins to be filled with lasting hope.
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Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
"Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light."

[media=https://youtu.be/kY5eAi4lvwE]
LadyGrace · 80-89
@Thinkerbell Amen!!! Thank you sister for the beautiful video. ♥
val70 · 56-60
@Thinkerbell At that time Jesus said, “I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children.

Yes, Father, for this is what you were pleased to do.

“All things have been committed to me by my Father. No one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.

“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.

Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.

For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”

(Matthew 11:25-30)
WoWgirll · 36-40, F
LadyGrace · 80-89
@WoWgirll Thank you so much.
markinkansas · 61-69, M
i at one time smoked 3 pacs a day .. then one day i was driving home and thought to myself how bad it tasted and tossed them out the window.. cold. . then in about a week the cravings were bad and then they faded away and two weeks back again.. it was over and over again and now its been 40 years .. i miss them still. and more so when i am stressed or depressed . and i also know tomorrow might be a better day.. kinda funny when ya think of that.. i have broke all my old habits in that manner. its just willpower and hope for a better day.. hope this helps someone .
and as for the pain it will fade away also. takes time .
LadyGrace · 80-89
@markinkansas I can't agree with you there. It's not about willpower for those who have a real addiction. It's about finding a healthy way to cope instead of grabbing for things that hurt our bodies. Some people don't know how to break their addiction.

If addiction were just about willpower, people would quit every day and never look back.

But science—and real life—show it’s far more complex. Trauma, brain chemistry, and learned coping patterns all play a role. That’s exactly what The Body Keeps the Score talks about.

Reducing it to “just willpower” ignores what people are actually fighting hard through—and that kind of thinking keeps people stuck, not free.

I used to think it was just about willpower too, but it’s a brain, body, and trauma issue.

Books like The Body Keeps the Score explains how past experiences can literally reshape the nervous system. When someone is dealing with that deep level of internal wiring and layers of trauma, it’s not about “just trying harder.”

Willpower can help—but it’s not the foundation. Healing, support, and addressing the root causes are.

 
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